Mr Raab, named the minister for civil liberties, started his career as an international lawyer at City law firm Linklaters, working on project finance, international litigation and competition law. He also spent time on secondments at human rights group Liberty and in Brussels advising on EU and World Trade Organisation law.

He joined the Civil Service as a Foreign Office lawyer in 2000, and during his six years he was posted to The Hague to head up a new team focused on bringing war criminals to justice.

From 2006 he worked as chief of staff to the then shadow home and justice secretaries, before winning an open primary to contest the safe Conservative seat of Esher and Walton in 2010. He was re-elected last week with a majority of 28,616.

Mr Raab has been outspoken on human rights and his first book, published in 2009, was entitled TheAssault on Liberty – What Went Wrong with Rights. This criticised Labour’s approach to human rights and made the case for British Bill of Rights.

Last year he led an unsuccessful rebellion in Parliament which aimed to reduce the ability of foreign criminals to use the right to a family life in article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights to resist deportation.

His appointment confirms that the government is to press ahead with its policy to repeal the Act and replace it with a Bill of Rights.

Ms Dinenage is another member of the 2010 intake in the safe seat of Gosport, Stubbington, Lee-on-the-Solent and Hill Head. She has been given family justice, mental health/mental capacity and coroners as her key briefs, previously held by LibDem Simon Hughes, who lost his seat last week.

A non-lawyer, she established her own manufacturing company in a gap year before university. She sat on the business, innovation and skills select committee in the last Parliament and was appointed small business ambassador for the south in 2013. She has also shown a keen interest in defence issues.

In April 2014, she was appointed parliamentary private secretary to education secretary Nicky Morgan, herself a former City solicitor.

Legal Futures Blog

A recent Legal Futures article reported that the number complaints involving use of social media by barristers is increasing. The BSB have warned that “as social media and the internet become more prominent in our daily lives, there is an increasing need for barristers to be very careful about what they post whether in their professional or personal lives”. While inappropriate use of social media isn’t anything new, what struck me when reading that paragraph is that, for barristers, I would argue, there shouldn’t be a defining line between the personal and professional. As a barrister, you are your own USP, your personal brand is everything.